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23944d0249
-- Signed-off-by: Daniel Kahn Gillmor <dkg@fifthhorseman.net>
276 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
276 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
How often have we to do a key lookup by mailaddress?.
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can this be accomplished by an external program?
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What about using S-Exp to describe the interface to the ciphers instead
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of simply iterating over them. This way we can easy register a name which
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can be used as the "hintstr" for --load-extension.
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EGD
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====
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Oh, and on embedding egd into the gpg package: I think if you just unpack it
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into, say, util/egd/* then you can put something like this into configure.in:
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AC_CHECK_PROG(perl_present, perl, true, false)
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if $perl_present; then
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AC_PATH_PROG(PERL, perl)
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(cd util/egd; $PERL Makefile.PL FULLPERL=$PERL INSTALLBIN=$sbindir)
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fi
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AM_CONDITIONAL(WITH_EGD, $perl_present)
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and add util/egd to the top-level Makefile directory list inside a WITH_EGD
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conditional.
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* What shall we do if we have a valid subkey revocation certificate
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but no subkey binding? Is this a valid but revoked key?
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* use a mmaped file for secure memory if mlock does not work and
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make sure that this file is always wiped out. Is this really
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more secure than swapping out to the swap disk? I don't
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believe so because if an attacker has access to the physical
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box (and he needs this to look at the swap area) he can also
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leave a Trojan horse which is far more easier than to analyze
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memory dumps. Question: Is it possible that a Unix pages
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an old (left over by some other process) swap page in for
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another process - this should be considered a serious design
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flow/bug.
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Date: Mon, 4 Jan 1999 19:34:29 -0800 (PST)
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From: Matthew Skala <mskala@ansuz.sooke.bc.ca>
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- Signing with an expired key doesn't work by default, does work with a
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special option.
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- Verifying a signature that appears to have been made by an expired key
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after its expiry date but is otherwise good reports the signature as BAD,
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preferably with a message indicating that it's a key-expiry problem rather
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than a cryptographically bad signature.
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- Verifying a signature from a key that is now expired, where the
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signature was made before the expiry date, reports the signature as
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GOOD, possibly with a warning that the key has since expired.
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- Encrypting to an expired key doesn't work by default, does work with a
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special option.
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- Decrypting always works, if you have the appropriate secret key and
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passphrase.
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==============================
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[ "-->" indicates a comment by me (wk) ]
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Hi Werner..
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I was looking at some of the PROJECTS items in the recent gpg CVS and wanted
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to comment on one of them:
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* Add a way to override the current cipher/md implementations
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by others (using extensions)
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As you know I've been thinking about how to use a PalmPilot or an iButton in
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some useful way in GPG. The two things that seem reasonable are:
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1) keep the secret key in the device, only transferring it to the host
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computer for the duration of the secret-key operation (sign or decrypt).
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The key is never kept on disk, only in RAM. This removes the chance that
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casual snooping on your office workstation will reveal your key (it
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doesn't help against an active attack, but the attacker must leave a
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tampered version of GPG around or otherwise get their code to run while
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the key-storage device is attached to attack the key)
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2) perform the secret-key operation on the device, so the secret key never
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leaves the confines of that device. There are still attacks possible,
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based upon talking to the device while it is connected and trying to
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convince the device (and possibly the user) that it is the real GPG,
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but in general this protects the key pretty strongly. Any individual
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message is still vulnerable, but that's a tradeoff of the convenience of
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composing that message on a full-sized screen+keyboard (plus the added
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speed of encryption) vs. the security of writing the message on a
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secure device.
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I think there are a variety of ways of implementing these things, but a few
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extension mechanisms in GPG should be enough to try various ways later on.
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1) pass an argument string to loadable extension modules (maybe
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gpg --load-extension foofish=arg1,arg2,arg3 ?)
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--> could also be achieved by S-Exps
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2) allow multiple instances of the same extension module (presumably with
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different arguments)
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--> set an alias name when loading them
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3) allow extension modules to use stdin/stdout/stderr as normal (probably
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already in there), for giving feedback to the user, or possibly asking them
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for a password of some sort
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--> there should really be some kind of callback mechanism.
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4) have an extension to provide secret keys:
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It looks like most of the hooks for this are already in place, it just
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needs an extension module which can register itself as a keyblock resource.
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I'm thinking of a module for this that is given an external program name as
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an argument. When the keyblock resource is asked to enumerate its keys, it
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runs the external program (first with a "0" argument, then a "1", and so on
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until the program reports that no more keys are available). The external
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--> better use a cookie: This way we are also stateless but have a more
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general interface.
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program returns one (possibly armored) secret key block each time. The
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program might have some kind of special protocol to talk to the storage
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device. One thing that comes to mind is to simply include a random number
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in the message sent over the serial port: the program would display this
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number, the Pilot at the other end would display the number it receives, if
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the user sees that both are the same they instruct the Pilot to release the
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key, as basic protection against someone else asking for the key while it
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is attached. More sophisticated schemes are possible depending upon how
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much processing power and IO is available on the device. But the same
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extension module should be able to handle as complex a scheme as one could
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wish.
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--> authenticate the session on startup, using DH and the mentioned
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cookie/screen/keyboard authentication.
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The current keyblock-resource interface would work fine, although it
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might be more convenient if a resource could be asked for a key by id
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instead of enumerating all of them and then searching through the resulting
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list for a match. A module that provided public keys would have to work this
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way (imagine a module that could automatically do an http fetch for a
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particular key.. easily-added automatic key fetching). Without that ability
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to fetch by id (which would require it to fall back to the other keyblock
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resources if it failed), the user's device might be asked to release the
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key even though some other secret key was the one needed.
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--> Right.
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5) have an extension to perform a secret-key operation without the actual
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secret key material
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--> Define a clear interface to do this and in the first step write
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a daemon which does exactly this.
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basically something to indicate that any decrypt or sign operations that
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occur for a specific keyid should call the extension module instead. The
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secret key would not be extracted (it wouldn't be available anyway). The
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module is given the keyid and the MPI of the block it is supposed to sign
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or decrypt.
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The module could then run an external program to do the operation. I'm
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imagining a Pilot program which receives the data, asks the user if it can go
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along with the operation (after displaying a hash of the request, which is
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also displayed by the extension module's program to make sure the Pilot is
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being asked to do the right operation), performs the signature or decryption,
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then returns the data. This protocol could be made arbitrarily complex, with
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a D-H key to encrypt the link, and both sides signing requests to
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authenticate one to the other (although this transforms the the problem of
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getting your secret key off your office workstation into the problem of
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your workstation holding a key tells your Pilot that it is allowed to perform
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the secret key operation, and if someone gets a hold of that key they may
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be able to trick your pilot [plugged in somewhere else] to do the same thing
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for them).
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This is basically red/black separation, with the Pilot or iButton having the
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perimeter beyond which the red data doesn't pass. Better than the secret-key
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storage device but requires a lot more power on the device (the new iButtons
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with the exponentiator could do it, but it would take way too much code space
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on the old ones, although they would be fine for just carrying the keys).
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The signature code might need to be extended to verify the signature you just
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made, since an active intruder pretending to the the Pilot wouldn't be able to
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make a valid signature (but they might sign your message with a different key
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just to be annoying).
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Anyway, just wanted to share my thoughts on some possibilities. I've been
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carrying this little Java iButton on my keyring for months now, looking for
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something cool to do with it, and I think that secure storage for my GPG key
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would be just the right application.
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cheers,
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-Brian
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-----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-----
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Version: GnuPG v0.4.5 (GNU/Linux)
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Comment: For info finger gcrypt@ftp.guug.de
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iD8DBQE2c5oZkDmgv9E5zEwRArAwAKDWV5fpTtbGPiMPgl2Bpp0gvhbfQgCgzJuY
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AmIQTk4s62/y2zMAHDdOzK0=
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=jr7m
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-----END PGP SIGNATURE-----
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About a new Keyserver (discussion with Allan Clark <allanc@sco.com>):
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=====================
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Some ideas:
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o the KS should verify signatures and only accept those
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which are good.
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o Keep a blacklist of known bad signatures to minimize
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the time needed to check them
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o Should be fast - I'm currently designing a new storage
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system called keybox which takes advantage of the fact
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that the keyID is highly random and can directly be
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used as a hash value and this keyID is (for v4 keys)
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part of the fingerprint: So it is possible to use the
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fingerprint as key but do an lookup by the keyID.
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o To be used as the "public keyring" in a LAN so that there
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is no need to keep one on every machine.
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o Allow more that one file for key storage.
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o Use the HKS protocol and enhance it in a way that binary
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keyrings can be transmitted. (I already wrote some
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http server and client code which can be used for this)
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And extend it to allow reuse of a connection.
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o Keep a checksum (hash) of the entire keyblock so that a
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client can easy check whether this keyblock has changed.
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(keyblock = the entire key with all certificates etc.)
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Transmitted in the HEAD info.
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o Allow efficient propagation of new keys and revocation
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certificates.
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Probably more things but this keyserver is not a goal for the
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1.0 release. Someone should be able to fix some of the limitations
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of the existing key servers (I think they bail out on some rfc2440
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packet formats).
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DJGPP
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=====
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Don't use symlinks but try to do the preprocessing in the config-links script.
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DJPGG has problems to distinguish betwen .s and .S becaus the FAT filesystem
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is not case sensitive (Mark Elbrecht).
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Well, it runs only on one architecture and therefor it might be possible
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to add a special case for it, completely bypassing the symlink autselection
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trick.
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Special procmail addresses
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==========================
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* foo+bar@example.net: Try to match the address without the "+bar".
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Should be done by the MUA, but maybe we can do this.
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--> Yep. Another reason to utilize a directory service or something
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else for keylookup.
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Suggested things which I will not do:
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=====================================
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* Let take --help an option to select some topics.
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Using grep is much easier
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* Check if an object (a message, detached sign, public key, or whatever)
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is signed by definite user, i.e. define user
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(userid, or any other unique identification) on command line.
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--> Use a script and --status-fd
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Copyright 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
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This file is free software; as a special exception the author gives
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unlimited permission to copy and/or distribute it, with or without
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modifications, as long as this notice is preserved.
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This file is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but
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WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY, to the extent permitted by law; without even the
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implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
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